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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Jan. 1, 1877
  • Page 47
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1877: Page 47

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    Article A PECULIAR CASE. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article Our Archaeological Corner. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 47

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Peculiar Case.

ip my travels ! " Haranguing him at the close of a day when he had neglected every duty , he broke the force of my censure by demanding if I was " for or agin capital punishment . " He habitually g lided away from a subject that happened to set against snake sliunder

jiim , just as Tennyson ' s " pt a spray !" Poor Cyrus ! I have not even veiled his insignificant and unmusical name , for he is no longer extant in a world he did nothing to benefit or adorn . Oblivion

called for him years ago . He was carried off in the season of green apples , being unable to restrain his reckless passion for unripe fruit . As I strew this handful of popp ies over his unconscious eyelids , I remember with a smile of gratitude the daily fun his droAvsy presence afforded to at least

one member of that little household by the sea ; and pondering hoAV small an interest he ever took in the industries of life , I confidently apply to his " peculiar case " the Avell-known assertion in a celebrated monody— " Little he'll reck if they let him

deep on ! " Vex not his ghost ! Light lie the turf on his inactive elbows , for they Avould be troubled , even now , if under pressure of any kind . It cannot be seriously said of him that he " rests from his labours , " poor lad , for his frequent

slumber was ahvays more natural than his infrequent toil , and he kneAV IIOAV to take much ease during his brief sojourn in this work-a-day Avorld . No " hoary headed swain " DoAvn East can ever make this passing observation touching the habits of our defunct acquaintance :

"Oft have we seen him at the peep of dawn Brushing Avith hasty steps the deAVS aAvay , To meet the sun upon the upland laAvn . "

But many of us still remember hoAV often "There at the foot of yonder nodding beech That Avreathes its oldfantastic roots so

, high , "is listless length at noontide Avould he stretch , And pore upon the brook that babbles by . "

Our Archaeological Corner.

Our Archaeological Corner .

BROTHERS OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE . BRO . George Fort the able author of the " Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry , " has published in the "

Philadelphia Keystone , " so admirably conducted by our amiable confrereBro . Clifford P . McCalla , an Ancient and Curious Document , which Ave give beloAV . It is well known , that in or about the year 1119 A . D ., Geoffry St . Omer and

Hugh de Paganis , Avith five others as some say , under the protection of Raymond Patriarch of Jerusalem and with the approbation of BalcUvin II . Kmg of Jerusalem formed themselves into a Knights Order to preserve the safety of the roads ,

to defend Christian Pilgrims , to , observe the vows of poverty , chastity , ancl obedience , as Avell frs hospitality to the poor , and above alFto protect those who Avent to visit the Holy Sepulchre . In the first instance , they seem to have been under the rule of

St . Basil . St . Bakhvin built for them a hospital close to the Temple , from Avhich they took the name of Knights of the Temple or Templars .

In 1128 Hugo de Paganis , with some others Avent to the Council of Troye , at Avhich the great St . Bernard was present , ancl certain rules and regulations Avere then draAvn up with the approbation of Pope Innocence IL , by Avhich they Avere

incorporated to pray under the name of " Pauperes commilitones Templi in Sancta Civitate "" Poor FelloAv Soldiers ( Knights ) of the Temple in the Holy City . " Some Avriters call them Knights of the Temple of Solomon , "Templimi

Solomonis , " but this does not appear in their OAVU rules , and the Temple more correctly perhaps refers to the " Sanctum Sepulchrum , " the Holy Sepulchre . At the Council of Troye they seem to have been p laced under the rule of St . Augustin , not

Benedict , as some writers assert . The words " frater , " or " frere , " or " brother , " seems to be used indifferently in the " Statuta " or regulations for the " Pauper commilito Christi , " the " Poor Fellow Soldier of Christ . " In the Latin the word " fratribus " is not added to the Latin " commilitonibus . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-01-01, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011877/page/47/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN ROME. Article 3
THE UNOPENED LETTER. Article 7
MASONIC NUMISMATICS. Article 7
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 10
LISTS OF OLD LODGES, No. 3. Article 13
A LIST OF THE WARRANTED LODGES Article 13
THE BIRTH OF THE ROSE. Article 17
BY THE "SAD SEA WAVES." Article 17
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 18
AN AMERICAN VINDICATION OF AMERICANS. Article 20
No. 194, UNDER THE "ANCIENTS" AND ITS RECORDS. Article 23
SONNET. Article 23
ALLHALLOWS, BREAD STREET. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 29
SLEEP ON MY HEART. Article 34
PUT YOURSELF IN MY PLACE. Article 35
JOINING THE FREEMASONS. Article 37
THE PHILADELPHIA EXHIBITION. Article 39
LOVE'S UTTERANCE. Article 41
POETS' CORNER. Article 41
A PECULIAR CASE. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 47
VULGARITY. Article 49
SONNET. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 52
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 53
Reviews. Article 55
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 62
THE OBJECT OF A LIFE. Article 66
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Page 47

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Peculiar Case.

ip my travels ! " Haranguing him at the close of a day when he had neglected every duty , he broke the force of my censure by demanding if I was " for or agin capital punishment . " He habitually g lided away from a subject that happened to set against snake sliunder

jiim , just as Tennyson ' s " pt a spray !" Poor Cyrus ! I have not even veiled his insignificant and unmusical name , for he is no longer extant in a world he did nothing to benefit or adorn . Oblivion

called for him years ago . He was carried off in the season of green apples , being unable to restrain his reckless passion for unripe fruit . As I strew this handful of popp ies over his unconscious eyelids , I remember with a smile of gratitude the daily fun his droAvsy presence afforded to at least

one member of that little household by the sea ; and pondering hoAV small an interest he ever took in the industries of life , I confidently apply to his " peculiar case " the Avell-known assertion in a celebrated monody— " Little he'll reck if they let him

deep on ! " Vex not his ghost ! Light lie the turf on his inactive elbows , for they Avould be troubled , even now , if under pressure of any kind . It cannot be seriously said of him that he " rests from his labours , " poor lad , for his frequent

slumber was ahvays more natural than his infrequent toil , and he kneAV IIOAV to take much ease during his brief sojourn in this work-a-day Avorld . No " hoary headed swain " DoAvn East can ever make this passing observation touching the habits of our defunct acquaintance :

"Oft have we seen him at the peep of dawn Brushing Avith hasty steps the deAVS aAvay , To meet the sun upon the upland laAvn . "

But many of us still remember hoAV often "There at the foot of yonder nodding beech That Avreathes its oldfantastic roots so

, high , "is listless length at noontide Avould he stretch , And pore upon the brook that babbles by . "

Our Archaeological Corner.

Our Archaeological Corner .

BROTHERS OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE . BRO . George Fort the able author of the " Early History and Antiquities of Freemasonry , " has published in the "

Philadelphia Keystone , " so admirably conducted by our amiable confrereBro . Clifford P . McCalla , an Ancient and Curious Document , which Ave give beloAV . It is well known , that in or about the year 1119 A . D ., Geoffry St . Omer and

Hugh de Paganis , Avith five others as some say , under the protection of Raymond Patriarch of Jerusalem and with the approbation of BalcUvin II . Kmg of Jerusalem formed themselves into a Knights Order to preserve the safety of the roads ,

to defend Christian Pilgrims , to , observe the vows of poverty , chastity , ancl obedience , as Avell frs hospitality to the poor , and above alFto protect those who Avent to visit the Holy Sepulchre . In the first instance , they seem to have been under the rule of

St . Basil . St . Bakhvin built for them a hospital close to the Temple , from Avhich they took the name of Knights of the Temple or Templars .

In 1128 Hugo de Paganis , with some others Avent to the Council of Troye , at Avhich the great St . Bernard was present , ancl certain rules and regulations Avere then draAvn up with the approbation of Pope Innocence IL , by Avhich they Avere

incorporated to pray under the name of " Pauperes commilitones Templi in Sancta Civitate "" Poor FelloAv Soldiers ( Knights ) of the Temple in the Holy City . " Some Avriters call them Knights of the Temple of Solomon , "Templimi

Solomonis , " but this does not appear in their OAVU rules , and the Temple more correctly perhaps refers to the " Sanctum Sepulchrum , " the Holy Sepulchre . At the Council of Troye they seem to have been p laced under the rule of St . Augustin , not

Benedict , as some writers assert . The words " frater , " or " frere , " or " brother , " seems to be used indifferently in the " Statuta " or regulations for the " Pauper commilito Christi , " the " Poor Fellow Soldier of Christ . " In the Latin the word " fratribus " is not added to the Latin " commilitonibus . "

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